Sterically stabilized second-order nonlinear optical chromophores and devices incorporating the same are embodied in a variety of chromophore materials. An exemplary preferred chromophore includes an electron donor group, an electron acceptor group and a ring-locked bridge structure therebetween, with the bridge structure being directly connected to the electron donor via a single bond. Another exemplary preferred chromophore includes an electron donor group, an electron acceptor group and a ring-locked bridge structure between the electron donor group and the electron acceptor group, with two free double bonds, one located between the donor and the bridge and the other located between the (fused) ring bridge and the acceptor. Another exemplary preferred chromophore includes an electron donor group, an electron acceptor group, and a bridge structure therebetween, with the chromophores having no carbon-carbon double bond between the donor and the (fused) ring bridge. In this class, there is only one unlocked carbon-carbon double bond between the (fused) ring bridge and the acceptor. Another exemplary preferred chromophore includes an electron donor group, an electron acceptor group, and a ring-locked bridge structure therebetween, with a built-in electron-withdrawing cyano group on the last ring of the (fused) bridge. Another exemplary preferred chromophore includes any electron donor group, an electron acceptor group including a linear conjugated triene bearing four cyano groups, and any bridge structure therebetween.
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26. An optical device comprising:
a nonlinear optical device having a nonlinear optical material which is polymeric, the nonlinear optical device being hermetically packaged in a container filled with an inert gas including one or more of nitrogen, neon and argon.
17. A nonlinear optical device comprising:
an active element formed from a chromophore including an electron donor group, an electron acceptor group, and a bridge structure between the electron donor group and the electron acceptor group, the bridge structure including a ring double-bonded to the electron acceptor group, the ring including an electron withdrawing group. 23. A nonlinear optical device comprising:
an active element formed from a chromophore including an electron donor group, an electron acceptor group including a linear conjugated triene bearing four cyano groups, and a bridge structure between the electron donor group and the electron acceptor group; wherein the linear conjugated triene is a linear extension of the conjugated system of the donor and the bridge. 1. A nonlinear optical device comprising:
an active element including a chromophore formed as:
wherein D is an electron donor group; wherein A is an electron acceptor group; wherein R=H, F, or any perhalogenated, halogenated or non-halogenated aliphatic or aromatic group with 1-30 carbon atoms functionalized with zero or more of the following functional groups: hydroxy, ether, ester, amino, silyl, and siloxy, and R groups at different positions are not necessarily the same.
15. A nonlinear optical device comprising:
an active element including a chromophore formed as:
wherein D is an electron donor group; wherein A is an electron acceptor group; wherein R=H, F, or any perhalogenated, halogenated or non-halogenated aliphatic or aromatic group with 1-30 carbon atoms functionalized with zero or more of the following functional groups: hydroxy, ether, ester, amino, silyl, and siloxy, and R groups at different positions are not necessarily the same. 10. A nonlinear optical device comprising:
an active element including a chromophore formed as:
wherein D is an electron donor group; wherein A is an electron acceptor group formed as:
wherein R=H, F, or any perhalogenated, halogenated or non-halogenated aliphatic or aromatic group with 1-30 carbon atoms functionalized with zero or more of the following functional groups: hydroxy, ether, ester, amino, silyl, and siloxy, and R groups at different positions are not necessarily the same. 8. A nonlinear optical device comprising:
an active element including a chromophore formed as:
wherein D is an electron donor group; wherein A is an electron acceptor group formed as:
wherein R=H, F, or any perhalogenated, halogenated or non-halogenated aliphatic or aromatic group with 1-30 carbon atoms functionalized with zero or more of the following functional groups: hydroxy, ether, ester, amino, silyl, and siloxy, and R groups at different positions are not necessarily the same. 14. A nonlinear optical device comprising:
an active element including a chromophore formed as:
wherein D is an electron donor group; wherein A is an electron acceptor group formed as:
wherein R=H, F, or any perhalogenated, halogenated or non-halogenated aliphatic or aromatic group with 1-30 carbon atoms functionalized with zero or more of the following functional groups: hydroxy, ether, ester, amino, silyl, and siloxy, and R groups at different positions are not necessarily the same. 9. A nonlinear optical device comprising:
an active element including a chromophore formed as:
wherein D is an electron donor group; wherein A is an electron acceptor group formed as:
wherein R=H, F, or any perhalogenated, halogenated or non-halogenated aliphatic or aromatic group with 1-30 carbon atoms functionalized with zero or more of the following functional groups: hydroxy, ether, ester, amino, silyl, and siloxy, and R groups at different positions are not necessarily the same. 12. A nonlinear optical device comprising:
an active element including a chromophore formed as:
wherein D is an electron donor group; wherein A is a ring-locked tricyano electron acceptor group; wherein R=H, F, or any perhalogenated, halogenated or non-halogenated aliphatic or aromatic group with 1-30 carbon atoms functionalized with zero or more of the following functional groups: hydroxy, ether, ester, amino, silyl, and siloxy, and R groups at different positions are not necessarily the same. 22. A nonlinear optical device comprising:
an active element including a chromophore formed as:
wherein D is an electron donor group; wherein B is a n-conjugate bridge; wherein A is an electron acceptor group; wherein R=H, F, or any perhalogenated, halogenated or non-halogenated aliphatic or aromatic group with 1-30 carbon atoms functionalized with zero or more of the following functional groups: hydroxy, ether, ester, amino, silyl, and siloxy, and R groups at different positions are not necessarily the same. 4. A nonlinear optical device comprising:
an active element formed from a chromophore including an electron donor group, an electron acceptor group, and a π-conjugate aliphatic fused-ring bridge structure between the electron donor group and the electron acceptor group; wherein the electron donor group is directly connected to the bridge structure, with no carbon-carbon double bond between the electron donor group and the bridge structure; wherein the electron acceptor group is connected to the fused ring of the bridge structure with a conjugated diene.
5. The nonlinear optical device of
6. The nonlinear optical device of
7. The nonlinear optical device of
11. The nonlinear optical device of
13. The nonlinear optical device of
18. The nonlinear optical device of
19. The nonlinear optical device of
20. The nonlinear optical device of
21. The nonlinear optical device of
24. The nonlinear optical device of any of claims 1-10 and 12-23 wherein the device is hermetically packaged in a container either vacuumed or vacuumed and then filled with an inert gas including one or more of: nitrogen, helium, neon, argon, krypton and xenon.
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This application is a continuation-in-part of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 09/122,806 entitled "New Class of High Hyperpolarizability Organic Chromophores and Process for Synthesizing the Same" filed on Jul. 27, 1998, now U.S. Pat. No. 6,067,186, and a continuation-in-part of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 09/488,422 entitled "Sterically Stabilized Second-Order Nonlinear Optical Chromophores and Devices Incorporating the Same" filed on Jan. 20, 2000, now U.S. Pat. No. 6,361,717, the disclosures of which arc incorporated herein by reference in their entirety.
This invention was made with support from the government of the United States of America under Contracts F49620-97-C-0064, F49620-97-1-0307, F49620-97-1-0491, F49620-98-C-0059, F49620-98-C-0077, F49620-99-0040 awarded by the United States Air Force. The government of the United States of America has certain rights in this invention as provided by these contracts.
1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to nonlinear optical chromophores and, more particularly, pertains to highly active second-order nonlinear optical chromophores with reduced degree of trans-cis isomerization and devices incorporating the same.
2. Description of the Related Art
Organic second-order nonlinear optical (NLO) materials have received increasing attention for applications involving signal processing and telecommunications. One of the challenges in this field is to design and synthesize second-order NLO chromophores (the active components of second-order nonlinear optical materials) that simultaneously possess large first molecular hyperpolarizabilities (β), good chemical, thermal and photochemical stability, and optical transparency at optical communication wavelengths (1.3 and 1.55 μm). Chromophore intermolecular electrostatic interactions prevent the simple scaling of molecular optical nonlinearity into macroscopic optical nonlinearity. Such interactions strongly attenuate the efficient induction of acentric chromophore order (hence, electrooptic activity) by electric field poling or self-assembly methods. Chromophores with β values many times those of the well-known Disperse Red 19 dye are thus required to obtain electrooptic coefficients comparable to or higher than those of the leading commercial material crystalline lithium niobate.
The value of β for a chromophore can be increased by using a diene moiety in place of thiophene in the conventional phenylethenylenethiophene π-conjugated bridge. Moreover, this enhancement in β can be accomplished without an increase in the wavelength of the charge-transfer absorption λmax. However, the resulting phenylpolyene bridge has poor thermal stability unless the polyene structure is sterically protected (ring locked).
In addition to microscopic and macroscopic nonlinearity, the chemical stability and alignment stability of second-order NLO material are also major problems which must be solved for successful employment of these materials in commercial devices. Chemical degradation of the material are caused by photoinduced chemical reaction and thermal decompostition. In oxygen-containing environment (e.g. air) photoinduced oxidation of chromophore is the major cause of chromophore degradation. Photoxoidation changes the chromophore to a new species that is effectively electrooptically inactive.
Orientational relaxation is also a major problem. The loss of chromophore dipole alignment is caused by photo-induced or thermally-induced structural isomerization, thermodynamic randomization and interchromophore electrostatic interaction, which favor a centrosymmetric antiparallel arrangement of dipoles. The dominant mechanism of photodegradation of chromophores in an oxygen containing environment is photo-oxidation by oxygen.
Properties (microscopic nonlinearity, macroscopic, chemical and thermal stability, etc) of second-order nonlinear optical material are inter-related. Optimization of one property often causes attenuation in other properties. A systematic approach to addressing both the stability and nonlinearity issues is needed for a balanced improvement of both properties.
The nonlinear optical devices and chromophores of the present invention address both the stability and nonlinearity issues, and embody a systematic approach to obtaining a balanced improvement of both properties.
According to exemplary preferred embodiments of the present invention, a solution to the dipole stability problem is to modify the chromophore structure to reduce the amount of (or completely eliminate) the structural units that are potential sources of randomization and to add some structure feature that reduces interchromophore dipole interaction.
The present invention provides for improvements in the chemical and alignment stabilities of polyene-bridged chromophores. It has been observed that polyene-bridge systems that contain free carbon-carbon double bonds can undergo trans-cis isomerization under radiation of light or when subjected to elevated temperatures. The trans-cis isomerization leads to low chemical stability (low decomposition temperature) and causes randomization of chromophore noncentrosymmetric alignment. According to the present invention, reducing the amount of freely isomerizing double bonds in bridge structures provides an effective way to enhance both the chemical stability and the alignment stability of electrooptic materials.
It has been observed, by studying the photochemical stability of highly active (high μβ) chromophores in inert atmospheres, that the removal of oxygen greatly enhances the photochemical stability of electrooptic (EO) materials and the complete elimination of oxygen from the device and the atmosphere is a solution to the problem of oxygen-related photochemical degradation. According to an exemplary preferred embodiment of the present invention, an electrooptic device is hermetically packaged in a container filled with inert gas.
A variety of different molecular structures are possible for the chromophores of the present invention. An exemplary preferred class of chromophores according to the present invention includes an electron donor group, an electron acceptor group and a ring-locked bridge structure therebetween, with the bridge structure being directly connected to the electron donor via a single bond. In this class of chromophores, there are two carbon-carbon double bonds that can undergo trans-cis isomerization. In a preferred embodiment, the bridge structure also includes at least one bulky side group to reduce interchromophore dipole interaction.
Another exemplary preferred class of chromophores according to the present invention includes an electron donor group, an electron acceptor group and a ring-locked bridge structure between the electron donor group and the electron acceptor group, with two free double bonds, one located between the donor and the bridge and the other located between the (fused) ring bridge and the acceptor. In a preferred embodiment, the bridge structure also includes at least one bulky side group.
Another exemplary preferred class of chromophores according to the present invention includes an electron donor group, an electron acceptor group, and a bridge structure therebetween, with the chromophores having no carbon-carbon double bond between the donor and the (fused) ring bridge. In this class, there is only one unlocked carbon-carbon double bond between the (fused) ring bridge and the acceptor. In a preferred embodiment, the bridge structure also includes at least one bulky side group.
Another exemplary preferred class of chromophores according to the present invention includes an electron donor group, an electron acceptor group, and a ring-locked bridge structure therebetween, with a built-in electron-withdrawing cyano group on the last ring of the (fused) bridge. In a preferred embodiment, the bridge structure also includes at least one bulky side group.
Another exemplary preferred class of chromophores according to the present invention include any electron donor group, an electron acceptor group including a linear conjugated triene bearing four cyano groups (e.g., new electron acceptor group 4CF or 4CI disclosed herein), and any bridge structure therebetween.
The NLO materials of the present invention are suitable for a wide range of devices. Functions performed by these devices include, but are not limited to, the following: electrical to optical signal transduction; radio wave to millimeter wave electromagnetic radiation (signal) detection; radio wave to millimeter wave signal generation (broadcasting); optical and millimeter wave beam steering; and signal processing such as analog to digital conversion, ultrafast switching of signals at nodes of optical networks, and highly precise phase control of optical and millimeter wave signals. These materials are suitable for arrays which can be used for optical controlled phased array radars and large steerable antenna systems as well as for electrooptical oscillators which can be used at high frequencies with high spectral purity.
Other objects, features and advantages of the invention will become readily apparent upon reference to the following detailed description when considered in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, in which like reference numerals designate like parts throughout the figures thereof, and wherein:
The following is a detailed description of the best presently known mode of carrying out the invention. This description is not to be taken in a limiting sense, but is made merely for the purpose of illustrating the general principles of the invention.
Referring to
For an exemplary synthesis of chromophores of the structure Ia in
An alternative synthetic scheme of chromophores of structure Ia is shown in FIG. 9. The synthesis of the starting material 1-(4-bis(2-t-butyldimethylsiloxyethyl) aminophenyl)-5,5-dimethylcyclohexen-3-one is described in C. Zhang, A. S. Ren, F. Wang, J. Zhu, L. Dalton, Chem. Mater. 1999, 11, 1966-1968.
Step 1. conjugate elongation of ketone: A solution of lithium diisopropylamide (4.7 mL 1.5M in THF, 7.05 mmol.) in THF (12 mL) was cooled to -20°C C. N-cyclohexylacetimine (6.7 mmol.) was added and the mixture was allowed to warm up to 0°C C. and was kept at the temperature for 15 min. It was re-cooled to -20°C C. and 1-(4-bis(2-t-butyldimethylsiloxyethyl)aminophenyl)-5,5-dimethylcyclohexen-3-one (6.71 mmol., in 15 mL of THF) was added over 3 min. The mixture was stirred for 5 more min. and was stopped by adding 1N acetic acid solution. The product was extracted with hexane and the extract was washed with sodium bicarbonate solution, dried with magnesium sulfate and condensed to dryness. The residue was purified by a silica gel column using ethyl acetate/hexane (1/20, v/v) to afford 74% yield of product.
Step 2: The above aldehyde product (2 mmol.) and 2-dicyanomethylene-3-cyano-4,5,5-trimethyl-2,5-dihydrofuran (2.1 mmol.) were dissolved in 10 mL of ethanol that contained 15 mg of sodium hydroxide. The solution was refluxed for 3h. After the reaction mixture was cooled down, the product precipitate was collected by filtration. The crude product was recrystallized from ethanol to give 55% yield of chromophore.
Referring to
Step 1. Follow the reaction procedure described for a similar reaction in C. Zhang, A. S. Ren, F. Wang, J. Zhu, L. Dalton, Chem. Mater. 1999, 11, 1966-1968.
Step 2. Conjugate elongation of ketone: A solution of lithium diisopropylamide (10.5 mmol.) in THF (16 mL) was cooled to -20°C C. N-cyclohexylacetimine (10 mmol.) was added and the mixture was allowed to warm up to 0°C C. and was kept at the temperature for 15 min. It was re-cooled to -20°C C. and the product enone of step 1 (10 mmol in 20 mL of THF) was added over 5 min. The mixture was stirred for 5 more min. and was stopped by adding 1N acetic acid solution. The product was extracted with hexane and the extract was washed with sodium bicarbonate solution, dried with magnesium sulfate and condensed to dryness. The residue was purified by column chromatography on silica gel to afford 65% yield of product.
A large number of variations of the structures depicted in
The synthesis of chromophores with structure Ib follows the same procedures used for the synthesis of the chromophores with structure Ic, except that fused double ring-locked enone is used as one of the starting materials.
Referring to
An exemplary synthesis of class IIb chromophores is shown in FIG. 13. The reaction conditions are described in Chem. Mater. 1999, 11, 1628-1632.
Referring to
Referring to
Referring to
Referring to
It should be appreciated that the principles of the present invention are also applicable to chromophores where one or more of the six-membered rings in the bridges are replaced with five-membered rings (FIG. 20), seven-membered rings (FIG. 21), or rings with greater numbers of members.
Referring to
Referring to
Referring to
Those skilled in the art will appreciate that various adaptations and modifications of the just described preferred embodiment can be configured without departing from the scope and spirit of the invention. Therefore, it is to be understood that, within the scope of the appended claims, the invention may be practiced other than as specifically described herein.
Zhang, Cheng, Fetterman, Harold R., Michael, Joseph, Steier, William
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